Share your views on changes to the Mental Health Act
Background
In 2017 the government asked for an independent review of the Mental Health Act 1983, to look at how it’s used and to suggest ways to improve it.
The review’s final report said that the Mental Health Act does not always work as well as it should for patients, their families and their carers.
The Department of Health and Social Care are now proposing a wide range of changes to the Mental Health Act, to put patients at the centre of decisions about their own care and ensure everyone is treated equally.
The changes are based on 4 principles that have been developed with people with lived experience of the Mental Health Act. They are:
- choice and autonomy – ensuring service users’ views and choices are respected
- least restriction – ensuring the Mental Health Act’s powers are used in the least restrictive way
- therapeutic benefit – ensuring patients are supported to get better, so they can be discharged from the Mental Health Act
- the person as an individual – ensuring patients are viewed and treated as individuals
You can read more about these proposals in the consultation document. There is also a summary version and an Easy Read version.
How to share your views
You can share your views via an online survey on the GOV.UK website. The deadline for responses is 21st April 2021 11:59pm.